Near the center of the Milky Wayare enormous filaments of radio energy that sometimes look like bones8+ Archives and one in particular has astronomers playing orthopaedists.
If the new picture at the top of this story reminds you of an X-ray, well, that's because it is. Scientists used a spacetelescope to examine a conspicuous fracture along the bone's 230 light-yearlength. The images from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, coupled with data from the MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa and the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array, have revealed what likely caused it to crack.
The assailant, seen right at the point of the break, could be a fast-spinning neutron star, known as a pulsar. Scientists think that, as the object whizzed through the galaxy at breakneck speed, it slammed through the bone and just kept on going. The collision apparently distorted the bone's magnetic field and warped its radio signal.
The discovery not only offers a diagnosis for how the filament fractured but highlights that a single star can rattle the galaxy, even long after its own death. The findingsdescribed by NASA this week were published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Researchers have named the filament G359-dot-something-something-something, but friends and fun astronomers just call it "The Snake." Why, you might ask? Because G359.13142-0.20005 just doesn't roll off the tongue.
The glowing streak threads through the congested downtown of the Milky Way. Dozens of other such filamentsappear in radio waves around the galactic center, lit up by particles spiraling through parallel magnetic fields. The Snake is one of the longest and brightest of its kind.
But why these structures exist — and what makes some longer and more luminous than others — remains a mystery.
As for the assailant, it's trying to make a quick getaway. Neutron stars form when massive stars explode into supernovas, leaving behind a crushed stellar core, perhaps just 10 miles wide. But a pulsarbeams radiation as it revolves like a lighthouse beacon.
The new images also suggest extra X-rays may be coming from the area around the pulsar. Particles like electrons and positrons — tiny pieces of matter and antimatter — that sped up during the crash may have caused them.
After a supernova, remnant neutron stars often get an intense kickback from the blast. Scientists estimate this pulsar could be flying at a dizzying 1 million to 2 million mph.
Topics NASA
Variation on a Theme of Jacques BrelA Dream of Toasted CheeseHappy Fourth of July from The Paris ReviewFall Sweeps by Alexander AcimanPhilosophy of the WorldHow to avoid malware when searching mental health termsMad With Desire (Kind Of)The Morning News Roundup for July 4, 2014W.T.Ph by Jonathan WilsonSmuthound by Dan PiepenbringHow to add and easily switch between accounts on TikTokInterview: Director Angel Manuel Soto on Latine cultural influences in 'Blue Beetle'Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for August 18Future Library by Dan PiepenbringSmuthound by Dan PiepenbringThird PlaceThe Morning News Roundup for July 8, 2014News websites accidentally host hardcore porn, thanks to old Vidme linksHighs in the MidAnne Hollander, 1930 Baidu Search integrates DeepSeek and Large Model ERNIE for advanced search · TechNode Samsung's Live Translate will be available on third The sun will be really stormy for the next year, NASA says Samsung announces AI Samsung Unpacked 2024: Sydney Sweeney, Tomorrow X Together, and more make cameos Trump won't stop making a deceptive bird claim. Experts debunk it. Smiley face on Mars is a telltale sign of its past Toyota sets up wholly Vekic vs. Paolini 2024 livestream: Watch Wimbledon for free Apple to restore TikTok on US App Store after Attorney General letter · TechNode The space station has a risky leak. How bad is it? NASA spotted a very young planet. It could become a super Chip firm Biren plans Hong Kong IPO to raise $300 million funding, sources say · TechNode An object struck a satellite in Earth's orbit, leaving a hole Samsung Galaxy Watch 7 vs. Apple Watch Series 9: What are the differences? Former Google DeepMind VP joins ByteDance as Seed team research lead · TechNode RoboSense delivers one millionth LiDAR sensor for humanoid robot Qinglong · TechNode Where to pre Chicago Sky vs. New York Liberty 2024 livestream: Watch WNBA for free Bumble adds option to report AI photos and videos
2.2623s , 10132.3046875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【18+ Archives】,Unobstructed Information Network